All Natural Herbs, Llc, V. State Liquor And Cannabis Board

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 8, 2021
Docket54083-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of All Natural Herbs, Llc, V. State Liquor And Cannabis Board (All Natural Herbs, Llc, V. State Liquor And Cannabis Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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All Natural Herbs, Llc, V. State Liquor And Cannabis Board, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 8, 2021

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II ALL NATURAL HERBS, LLC, No. 54083-5-II

Appellant,

v.

WASHINGTON STATE LIQUOR AND UNPUBLISHED OPINION CANNABIS BOARD,

Respondent.

WORSWICK, J. — All Natural Herbs, LLC, (ANH) appeals a superior court order denying

ANH’s petition for review under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA).1 ANH applied for a

recreational cannabis license but was assigned a low-priority designation by the State Liquor and

Cannabis Board’s Licensing and Regulation Division (the agency) and has yet to receive a

license. ANH first petitioned for review of the agency’s determination in 2016, and disputes a

final order of the Liquor and Cannabis Board (the Board). ANH’s overarching argument is that

the agency missed its 90-day statutory deadline to notify ANH that it had commenced

adjudicative proceedings after ANH requested review under RCW 34.05.413 and RCW

34.05.419.2

1 Chapter 34.05 RCW. 2 RCW 34.05.413 establishes when an agency shall commence an adjudicative proceeding and what constitutes commencing that proceeding. RCW 34.05.419 mandates timelines for the agency on application for adjudication. No. 54083-5-II

ANH’s 22 assignments of error fall into five categories: (1) the agency failed to commence

an adjudicative proceeding within 90 days, and thus, by operation of default, ANH is entitled to a

recreational cannabis license; (2) the Board violated ANH’s due process rights; (3) RCW

34.05.419 and the agency’s licensing rule were unconstitutional as applied; (4) the Board’s March

2017 final order was an unconstitutional prior restraint under the First Amendment; and (5) the

agency unconstitutionally discriminated on the basis of race. We hold that the agency timely

commenced an adjudicative proceeding and that ANH fails to show that the Board or agency

violated ANH’s constitutional rights. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

I. MARIJUANA LICENSING SCHEME IN 2015

In 2015, Washington merged its existing medical marijuana market with the new retail

marijuana industry. Laws of 2015, ch. 70 (codified in part of chapter 69.50 RCW). Due to the

limited number of licenses available, the Legislature implemented former RCW 69.50.331(1)(a)

in 2015, which required the Board to assign Priority 1, 2, or 3 status to applicants for the new

licenses. Former RCW 69.50.331(1)(a) (2015); see also former WAC 314-55-081 (2015); WSR

15-19-165. The Board then created rules implementing the priority determination system to

specify the criteria for applicants. Former WAC 314-55-020 (2015). Applicants were to be

processed for licensure in order of priority and by date of application submission. Former WAC

314-55-020(3) (2015). Priority 1 applicants were more likely to receive a license because the

agency processed these applications first. See Top Cat Enters., LLC v. City of Arlington, 11 Wn.

App. 2d 754, 756, 455 P.3d 225 (2020).

2 No. 54083-5-II

The Board accepted license applications under this scheme between October 12, 2015

and March 31, 2016, and received more than 2500 applications for 222 available licenses. The

agency collected applicants’ documentation and assigned a priority determination. It was under

this scheme that ANH sought a retail marijuana license. To achieve a Priority 1 designation, an

applicant was required to, among other things, operate or be employed by a collective garden

before January 1, 2013. Former RCW 69.50.331(a)(i).

II. ALL NATURAL HERBS’ APPLICATION

Il Yi, the owner of ANH, had experience in the cannabis industry going back to 2011 that

was relevant to being able to apply for a license under the 2015 scheme.3 Yi was employed by a

cannabis organization doing business as The Healing Center of Tacoma. Yi received a W-2 tax

form for 2011 showing him as an employee of The Healing Center of Tacoma.

The Healing Center of Tacoma was a collective cannabis garden. Under the medical

marijuana scheme, collective gardens existed “for the purpose of producing, processing,

transporting, and delivering cannabis for medical use.” Former RCW 69.51A.085(1) (2011).

However, the statute governing collective gardens imposed certain conditions, including:

“No useable cannabis from the collective garden is delivered to anyone other than one of the

qualifying patients participating in the collective garden.” Former RCW 69.51A.085(1)(e)

(2011).

Although Yi was employed by The Healing Center of Tacoma, the business repeatedly

reported to the Secretary of State that it was not doing business between 2011 and 2013. Despite

the Department of Revenue reporting that The Healing Center was up to date on its excise taxes,

3 Yi is Korean-American.

3 No. 54083-5-II

the record also shows that The Healing Center filed no wage information with the State

Employment Security Department and paid no taxes before April 2016. The owner of The

Healing Center also admitted that he had not paid the company’s taxes. Moreover, the

Department of Labor and Industries had no account for covered employees on file for The

Healing Center of Tacoma.

In 2012, Yi started his own medical cannabis business, Natural 7, LLC. Yi later formed a

second LLC, ANH.

On March 27, 2016, four days before the end of the application period, ANH filed an

application for a retail marijuana license, which Yi completed by filing a Priority Verification

Form and providing other documentation on April 7. Despite personally operating as Natural 7

previously, Yi listed The Healing Center of Tacoma as the predecessor entity on ANH’s license

application. On April 21, the agency notified ANH it had been assigned Priority 3 status.

On April 27, ANH sent a letter requesting the agency change its status to Priority 1, or in

alternative, provide an explanation for its Priority determination. The letter contained a typo

conflating Priority 1 and Priority 3 that confused agency staff. As a result, the agency records

staff asked for clarification.

On May 4, ANH responded by email and requested documents explaining the Priority

determination. A timeline and synopsis of the emails exchanged between ANH and the agency

follows:

12:43 pm – ANH sent an email to clear up the confusion about its letter. The email stated

that ANH was seeking information explaining why it was not assigned Priority 1.

4 No. 54083-5-II

The email stated, “This information will be used for an appeal.” Clerk’s Papers

(CP) at 406-07.

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